I considered that, but he mentioned solutions found in the 40s. From what I can tell, those didn't use fans at all. If this would have worked on the Mini, I'm sure they would have done it.
I considered that, but he mentioned solutions found in the 40s. From what I can tell, those didn't use fans at all. If this would have worked on the Mini, I'm sure they would have done it.
It's currently a byproduct of biodiesel produced from canola oil, with the goal of producing it from algae in the future (hence "Aquafuel").
It may not be rocket science, but it would require changing the drive axis of the fan, presumably with a couple of bevel gears — an unnecessary (small engine, mild climate) extra cost for a cheap-as-possible car.
[Edit: Just realized this was an old article, linked from a new one I guess. Oh well.]
If we're allowing discontinued cars, just off the top of my head, 2+2's:
Matra M530
Dino/Ferrari GT4
Ferrari Mondial
3-seat:
Matra Bagheera
Matra Murena
And apparently the BMW i8 is 2+2 and mid-engine (plus motors front and rear).
Outer layer delaminated from belt, air escaping through inner layer. I had some bicycle tires do a similar trick. Wasn't a one-off in that case; they got recalled for it.
Okay, so upon further consideration, the number is misleading because the engines will be replaced by presumably-compliant engines emitting similar amounts of CO2. Differences in other pollutants may be huge, but would be a small portion of the total number.
That's gotta be including CO2. See my reply to EvanMcM: http://jalopnik.com/of-course-they…
Assuming they're counting CO2 as a pollutant, the mass of pollutants is higher than the fuel intake.
350000/730/18.07 ~= 26.5 gal/year/engine. Totally believable.
That 18.07 is lbs CO2 per gallon gasoline (http://blueskymodel.org/gallon-gas). Diesel (the first company's "compression ignition engines") would be…
Combustion efficiency is limited to about 35%. Fuel cells reach maybe 60%.
This is a Cord 812; the game car is based on a Merc. Both Classic Era, otherwise totally different.
In case you weren't just joking:
By about a third, aye. The wheel doesn't insulate much.
Presumably heat insulation to protect the paint on the other side, reduce heat waves in vision, and/or allow for warmer restarts. American cars have the same, but it's often fiberglass (which is not what you'd chose for sound).
The 2015 MY WRX uses a blown version of the BRZ motor - mpg went from 19/25 to 21/28.
No Saabs or Spykers? I am disappoint.
They've been at it awhile: http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/07/10/in-…
Fewer than half of these seem to fit real tires. Michelin must have money to burn.
The NYT talks about ones made in Mexico and the US.
This is not music I associate with classic Bugattis, even replicas. Maybe an EB110, though.
Cars from Lexus are highly refined and relaxing, just like the music of Norah Jones. You know Come Away With Me would sound great on your fancy Mark Levinson stereo.
Still, if you don't dwell too much on just who that poor dragon-lunch is, it's a pretty fantastic looking logo, even in today's highly stylized and streamlined form. I wouldn't mind seeing some more blatant dragon-eating-people motifs on their cars, either. I'm thinking maybe something nice and detailed and big that…